How Did You Celebrate World Dumpling Day, Reading and the Spring Garden

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world dumpling day 26th of September

dim sum in bamboo steamer, chinese cuisine

How exciting is this day? Our family love dumplings, yum cha, dim sum, call those succulent, puffy, luscious little pillows whatever you like, we like to eat them! Full of flavour and fresh vegetables and proteins we have so many favourite dumplings! We often celebrate the arrival of our son in Perth, birthdays and other special days with yum cha. So we were happy to celebrate World Dumpling Day.

Australians have a few unique dishes but we’re very good at adopting the best of every cuisine in the World. For instance, this week we’ve eaten sushi, dumplings, croissants, pizza, chicken schnitzel, a Spanish Tortilla, wraps with salad and butter chicken and Toad in the Hole.

Toad in the Hole. I know, I was surprised by this very English dish, too, but my husband was reading a book in which the author referred to cooking then eating Toad in the Hole. He found a recipe, we shopped for the ingredients and dinner was Toad in the Hole. Apart from the hilarious name, this dish neither looked like toads nor, I imagine, tasted like toads, but it was very good.

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Toad in the Hole straight from the oven.

Cumberland sausages from the British Sausage Company were browned then a delicious batter was poured over. This became a crisp batter with the sausages almost totally embedded in the mix. Served with onion gravy, boiled, drained and then roasted potatoes with rosemary and sea salt plus broccoli. We really enjoyed our dinner and my husband says he’ll make it again. Yes please.

Food products traditionally used by Indigenous Australians are also appearing in our cuisine.  In a recent cooking program on TV one team presented a meal based on bush food or bush tucker, products indigenous to different parts of Australia. The menu included kangaroo meat which is very lean. The most popular indigenous food is probably finger limes. They’re shaped like a small cucumber with green citrus skin and inside are pearl like bubbles of citrus flavour. The bubbles pop and explode with a strong citrus taste.

reading

I have just finished Cherie  Jones’s How The One Armed Sister Sweeps Her House. Centred on the lives of three generations of women in Barbados it was a difficult book to read but also a well written book.

It begins with a young girl being cautioned by her Grandma about taking risks and being disobedient. The cautionary tale tells about the reckless sister not doing as she was told and as a consequence, losing her arm.

Barbados is promoted as a land of long white beaches with endless cocktails and parties on the beach. This is the paradise of wealthy tourists and ex-pats but underneath the surface is poverty, violence and drug dealing and addiction. The locals plait the tourists’ hair, mind their children, clean their houses and sell them drugs.  The young men sell their bodies to young and old women and sometimes, men.

But this book is really the story of intergenerational  violence, rape, paedophilia, prostitution, corruption and murder. The sacrifices made by the women in this story, ranging from 1979 -1984, is dictated by what has happened before in this community. Shocking but perpetuated by each generation.

The story is really about Lala, brought up by her Grandmother after her mother is murdered when Lala is a small child and how she perpetuates the same violent relationships, too, despite her grandmother’s attempts to protect and then prevent her going astray. Lala finds herself at 18 married to a violent murderer. She is pregnant. She delivers her baby prematurely while her husband is out robbing then murdering an ex-pat.

Later, during one of his violent attacks the baby is dropped and dies. Lala somehow manages to find enough money to catch a plane to America not knowing her husband has been murdered that morning. I suppose this suggests a happy ending but this was a grueling book and one that has stayed on my mind. Cherie Jones is an attorney in Barbados and an author to watch!

the spring garden

I really like arum lilies. The contrasting crisp green stems and leaves then the pure white flower with the orange/yellow powdery stamen  peeping out is so attractive. They are considered a weed in Western Australia! I grow them in a bed which is separate from other plants and they cannot escape.

Loving spring flowers from the garden and also enjoying spring foods, some from my garden. I am picking snow peas every two or three days and have tomatoes developing on one of three tomato bushes. The herbs are thriving in the spring weather and I have great hopes for passion fruit this year, too, as the vine looks very healthy.
Just picked snow peas for dinner.

did you know?

two ants on plant stem detail

Adobe image

I heard today that there’s an estimated 2.5 million ants on Earth for every person!
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Six Signs of Spring, Father’s Day Weekend , Roses and Snow Peas

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you know it’s spring when…

The dawn chorus wakes you up! There’s birds everywhere. The pair of white cheeked honey eaters nesting in our garden is loud and energetic.

The days are noticably warmer by mid morning although the evenings can still be cool. There’s still rain every few days so the spring garden (and weeds) thrive.

Suddenly the shops are full of summer clothes.

There’s so many people outdoors, walking, riding, picnicking and just sitting in the sun in the middle of the day.

woman leaning on white table

unsplash

All the bare, deciduous trees are sprouting lime green fresh leaves.

gray pathway between green trees during daytime

Unsplash

In Western Australia there’s another thing too; everyone remarks on how bad their hay fever is, how their eyes itch, their noses run and their sinuses hurt! Caused by the prolific number of wildflowers which grow in our bush and grasslands.

father’s day

On Sunday 4th September we celebrated Father’s Day in Australia. Our son arrived Friday night from Kalgoorlie and stayed until Monday morning which was lovely! When he arrives we like to go to our favourite yum cha restaurant. We sit and chat, eat delicious little bites and drink tea and really enjoy being together.

I made apple muffins for afternoon tea as no one wanted lunch after yum cha. Neither breakfast nor lunch, yum cha is eaten mid morning as brunch.

My husband likes Zwiebelkkuchen, German Onion Pie. It tastes best made the day before you plan eating it. A delicious mixture of egg, bacon and onion, obviously, it also has sour cream, caraway seeds, salt and pepper. It is most often made in a pastry shell, but we prefer it without the pastry. So this was our Father’s Day breakfast on Sunday.

Rich and delicious served with a spicy fruit chutney and tomato.

For lunch I made a family favourite; Lasagne. I know everyone has their favourite recipe but I make the one on the back of the lasagne sheet box! It always turns out well, rich in flavour and looking superb when it comes out of the oven. The leftovers made two more meals for us and I think the flavour became richer each time.

I had also made a lemon meringue pie for dessert but we had it later in the day. I make my own version of Pâte  Brisée, an all purpose pastry. I don’t know where I got the recipe but I’ve made it for years and it never fails.

There was some pastry leftover and because I try not to waste food, I lined a pie dish with the off cuts after I’d rolled them into a ball  and made another pie!

The lemons were from a neighbour and were fresh and tart. The pie was quite rich, too, so I served it with cut up strawberries, pears and apples. I look forward to the citrus season every year and enjoy the fruit in both sweet and savoury  dishes. I don’t really like oranges but love the smell of both mandarins and oranges and waft the scent of both around the house or burn an orange scented candle.

spring roses and snow peas

Do you live in the southern hemisphere? After a very wet and cold winter the onset of spring  weather is very welcome. After two years of battling chili thrip which decimated our roses, I am very pleased with these highly scented, big unblemished blooms on the Holterman’s Gold rose bush. The other roses doing well now are Glamis Castle and the red Pierre de Ronsard. Pretty, scented and long lasting as cut flowers, they are the first of the spring roses to bloom.

Snow peas have done well, too, so a little crop to be harvested every couple of days. Picked, washed, added to leftover German Onion Pie with some fruit chutney for lunch another day.

WHAT’S IN THE BOX?

Our son presented me with a box. The outside hinted at the contents! Chocolate and licorice, perfect things to find in a box. During the pandemic there was a push to Buy From The Bush as passing traffic ceased. These small businesses struggled to survive, so promoted their products online if they had reliable broadband. Many of us sought rural suppliers during this time. Lucky me! A big box of organic licorice and chocolates was my surprise from Junee in rural NSW.

It is with great sadness we acknowledge the death of Queen Elizabeth 11.

 

 

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Wordle and Other Pastimes

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wordle

Are you a fan of Wordle? Originally designed by British software engineer, James Wardle to amuse his wife, Wordle is an online word puzzle. Now owned by The New York Times, a new puzzle is posted every day. Each puzzle has one word of five letters and you get six attempts to solve it. Each time you enter a correct letter in the right box, it turns green, a correct letter but not in the right box turns yellow and a letter not in the word stays grey.

 

This is a quick, ad free, satisfying puzzle. There’s no flashing lights, no ghastly sound track and it only requires a few minutes. There’s all sorts of ‘cheat’ sites online, too, but I can’t really see the point! These sites give hints, a starting letter, lists of the most common letters in five letter words, and suggests best starter words and even lists of all the five letter words plus the answer.

Lots of off shoots online, too. There’s so many variations of word puzzles, plus a fun one called Flagle  which gives you hints to guess the flag and also Worldle, with hints to help you work out the country or region featured. All engaging and pretty quick to complete!

other occupations

I’ve painted a blue wren and a Banksia burdetti, both endemic to south west Western Australia. I was happy with the wren but not so happy with the banksia

Completed the fourth week of an exercise class which feels like Pilates on steroids. Just when I feel I can do something without leaving exhausted, they increase the weights. Feel great afterwards. Yoga is gentle but I leave there feeling great, too.

Annual visit to the dermatologist done, nothing burnt off or cut out this year. Wonderful!

Sad remnants of the once glorious apricot tree.

This sad sight is our espaliered apricot tree which no longer gets enough sun to flourish, so I decided to remove it. Hard decision but the palm trees behind are only going to get bigger and block out more sunshine. We stripped off the branches and then my brother used his chainsaw to cut the remaining trunk to a manageable size for us to deal with later. I’ll start new planting soon in this bed. I’ll be planting things that don’t need much sunlight but will bring some colour.

These orbs have sat under the lime tree in the front courtyard for about twelve years. They were rusted and disintegrating. I treated the rust then sprayed them with a rust retarding paint. This is a temporary treatment and I will have to replace them in the future.

The repaired orbs look good under the lime tree. Spring is in the air and things in the garden are waking up! We have fresh lemons and limes at the moment. The azaleas and clivias have added some colour during this gloomy, long winter.

These dear little pansies with their sweet faces are blooming, too.

As usual, made three loaves of rye sourdough. I keep a few slices in the fridge and the rest in the freezer and I find it lasts almost a month. Homemade rye bread is made using a mother/starter, flour, water, molasses and a pinch of salt. Now days I let the Kitchen Aide do the mixing. I used to rely on feeling the elasticity of the dough as I kneaded it on the bench top to tell me when it was ready. It was quite a lot of work. Now I just guess and it has worked well so far.

Three bowls of sponge starter and three bowls of flour ready for a morning of bread baking.

The ease of making bread in the Kitchen Aide compared to hand kneading, the way bread has been made for centuries, made me ponder other changes brought about by technology. My car replaced one I’d had for thirteen years so the new technology was pretty amazing. Connectivity allows me to use  the phone, talk to it to change radio stations, swap tracks on Spotify, change the temperature, get directions and probably many other things I haven’t discovered. I have never explored the self parking system but like some of the other things, such as the screen image of exactly how I’m lined up in a parking bay, how close other vehicles are, changed speed limits and advice on traffic flow are all useful.

Free Gray Car Seat Cover Stock Photo

This is not my car but you get the idea!                                                        Image  Pexels

I think about the things I can do on my devices, the individualised settings on some of the equipment at the gym, even the noise the fridge makes if the door is open too long and the way lights are set to come on around the house at different times in the evening. Developments in medicine are equally amazing, resulting in quicker and more accurate diagnosis and treatments.

did you know?

The Australian dollar is considered to be the most structurally advanced currency in the world.  The notes are made of polymer and are almost impossible to counterfeit. They’re colourful, too!

 

 

 

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French Holidays and Roasting Fennel

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the french ON holidays

Free photos of Menton

Menton Pixabay

I am thinking about the French. Mostly I’m thinking about the way they go on holidays. The French have five weeks of paid holidays a year and these grand vacances are usually in July and August. Visit Paris in August and you’ll find even the boulangerie shuttered and deserted.  It’s summer holidays and many Parisians flee the city for the country. Mostly the French stay within France for their holidays, unlike many Australians, most of whom came from somewhere else, even if it was five or six generations ago. Australians go seeking the uniqueness of other cultures, the French prefer their own!

Free photos of Architecture

Pixabay

Many French have access to beach houses where several generations of their family will gather for extended periods. They swim, eat, sleep, read, shop. They enjoy traditional, restful holidays. They eat the local specialties intermingled with their usual cuisine. When Australians go on holidays they rush from one site to the next, jamming in as many galleries and museums as they can. They hire cars to visit the cultural attractions, they take photos of all the statues and buildings and generally rush around, completing a detailed and exhausting itinerary.

Free stock photo of berlin, brandenburg gate, light Stock Photo

The Brandenburg Gate, Pexels

 I’m thinking about this as our next planned holiday fits all the criteria of achieving as much as possible every day. The Margaret River Region Open Studios, an annual event where artists in the region open their studios daily for two weeks is wonderful but requires meticulous planning to do everything we want to do in a week. Although the program is online, we prefer a paper copy. Using different coloured highlighter pens we both mark the studios we’d like to visit, or in my case, one I’d also like to re-visit. The studios are in four areas, making it easy to decide on one zone a day, so then the real decisions are made. Finally, we have a map with the places we’re visiting marked and try to stick to the plan. Next comes the booking of lunch time cafes and restaurants. It’s a lot of planning for a week away.

Free Pencil Drawings on Wooden Table and Women Hands Stock Photo

Pexels

Rigorous but stimulating, this will be a very busy break. Then I think we should plan a “French” style sea break. A swim in the morning, a pile of books and magazines, lunch somewhere close by, perhaps a little sleep, then a walk or another swim before a dinner of cheese, crackers and a punnet of strawberries. Unlike French style holidays, my beach break will involve no sun tanning and lots of sun screen! And a hat, always.

Couple Holding Hands while Running on the Sand

Pexels

Reading a French blog this morning I was pleased to see that espadrilles are de rigeur  again this season. Not that I really care about fashion but I do really like the ones I bought last year and look forward to wearing them again. The beach outfits featured on the same blog are in a different category all together. Offering little coverage at all I think the dresses, playsuits and bikinis are intended for a particular age group which doesn’t include me!

fennel

Fennel is an eyecatching vegetable. So eyecatching, in fact, I bought one at the green grocer, although I have never prepared or cooked fennel before. We have enjoyed fennel seeds in Indian cooking and fennel salads in Alsace but I have never actually made anything from a fresh fennel.

Free photos of Fennel fruit

Fennel Seeds Pixabay

Looked at lots of online recipes. Did you know fennel belongs to the same group as carrots? They don’t look alike! Fennel is eaten thinly sliced and raw in salads or roasted. It smelt slightly of aniseed when I was cutting it up but this wasn’t really noticeable when it was cooked. Most recipes I read advised keeping the cut off celery like stalks and any hard outer layers for soup. So I gathered up beans, carrot, cauliflower and the fennel stalks and outer layers and made a pot of soup, too. I kept some of the wispy fronds as a finishing touch when I served dinner.

The recipe suggested roasting fennel with carrot and onions. Did as I was told. The marinade was a mix of balsamic vinegar, olive oil, Italian herbs, garlic , lemon juice and salt and pepper. (I didn’t have any white balsamic vinegar, as recommended, so used red. Tasted very good) In another pan I roasted chat potatoes in duck fat. It was cold and stormy outside so a starchy, roasted dinner was very attractive!

Roasted fennel is slightly sweet and soft and really luscious. The three vegetables were slightly sweet and were well caramelised.

Salmon with Mediterranean herbs, the roasted fennel, carrot, onion and potatoes and a squeeze of lemon. Lovely dinner and leftover roasted vegetables for a salad and also there’s a pot of soup.

Spring

At the end of the month the Southern Hemisphere welcomes Spring. We are currently experiencing the cold and wet sort of weather I remember from my childhood.  I have enjoyed the rain but also look forward to spring flowers and planting tomatoes. After disappointing  harvests, for us, not the rats, I will grow them in a cage. So unattractive. Are you beginning to plan a Spring garden?

 

 

 

 

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Vincent Van Gogh Alive and The Winter Garden

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van gogh alive

Are you a fan of Vincent van Gogh? I love the way he boldly applied paint. When we visited the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam I stood in front of the paintings, intrigued by the texture and sweeping application of bold, unexpected colours. So when Van Gogh Alive arrived in Perth I booked a ticket for the 29th of July. He was born 30/03/1853 and died on the 29th of July 1880. Due to timed tickets it seemed safe to visit the exhibition, wearing a mask. It was  a multi sensory exhibition using many screens, 3,000 images and a soundtrack. Amazing and lovely.

It was remarkable! Seeing his works on huge screens, then sections enlarged even more with added animation all accompanied by a well chosen soundtrack was wonderful. The artworks dominated the walls in both darkened halls. The pictures were interspersed with his reflections on life in text on screens. Some thoughts  resonated, some suggested his ongoing battles with mental well being, but all fitted well into the exhibition.

Leading up to visiting Van Gogh Alive we had watched a documentary  ‘A Shot In A Starry Night: Van Gogh Case’ which investigates the circumstances around his death and questions whether he committed suicide. Due to the lack of knowledge concerning forensic evidence and the reliance on the memory of a very old lady, recorded in 1935, no real conclusion can be made but it was lovely seeing the part of town where Van Gogh lived. The house, cafe and adjoining buildings, the church and landscapes he painted, all featured.

I’d like the ceiling in our bedroom painted just like his Almond Blossoms but the suggestion was not received enthusiastically.

winter garden

Trees bare of leaves, climbing roses stretched over arches but without blooms or foliage, rose bushes pruned back and other plants not doing much in the cold, wet days of winter. This creates a good opportunity to assess and maybe refine the garden. Our verge was stripped bare, had new soil added, plus weed mat and new reticulation and was then replanted with hibbertia scandens (Snakevine)). It will take two years to thicken and reach about 40 cm in height but is already doing well.

The front courtyard just needs the hedges clipped. Both the plumbago and box need tidying. The roses in pots have been pruned, tucked in with mushroom compost and are beginning to shoot. The lime tree needs some light pruning but mostly needs weeding and restoration of the three metal orbs which sit at the base. I can’t finish sealing them as it hasn’t stopped raining for days and days!

Need some touching up before they go back under the lime tree. Always raining! Good for us, not good for drying paint.

These orbs have been there a very long time. They have slowly deteriorated. I really like them but close inspection revealed lost, rusted off bits. The orbs were in bad shape! So, I scrubbed them carefully, left them to dry, treated them with rust retardant and then sprayed them with bronze coloured paint which claims to slow down the rust. Hope so!

The back garden is a much bigger job. The neighbour’s palm trees have gradually reached a height where they were blocking out the sun from reaching our espaliered apricot tree and the two Pierre de Ronsard climbing roses over an arch. The rats enjoyed the few apricots that survived so I decided the tree should go. The upcoming council ‘green’ pickup determined when this would happen. So, only the trunk remains and I’ll get that sorted out soon.

The sad trunk of the apricot tree, starved of light, it ceased producing masses of fruit. The rats were often quicker than me at spotting the ripe apricots. They live in the palm trees over the fence which have blocked the sunlight.

The next decision was what to do with the very leggy roses on the arch. The roses had grown to the top of the arch where they enjoyed sunlight. Unreachable blooms! I began cutting them down, too, motivated by the green verge pickup but can’t really decided what to do; the arch was very beautiful in the past, covered in blooms.  I’m not sure when the palms will get tall enough for the roses to flourish again. At the moment, the palms are home to the rats. I hear them scuttling about in the evening and occasionally see them racing up the trunks. So, for now, I’ve cut the roses right back to the base,  still cogitating!

Free Photograph of Blooming Flowers in a Bucket Stock Photo

Pixabay

The tulips have germinated, as have ranunculus, poppies and some dahlias. The pansy seedlings are doing well. The other thing doing well is weeds. I have some many and it’s so hard to eradicate them. I do make lots of weed tea which goes on the passion fruit, blueberries, snow peas and celery.

I hope you are enjoying a good week!

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Politics, Planting, Painting and Eating

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politics

Australians will be voting in a Federal election shortly. Both major parties are promising all sorts of unachievable changes, such as more doctors and nurses and aged care staff. These are going to be created out of nowhere! Political magic. One party is promising more workers for rural areas. More magic. We have the lowest unemployment rate since 2014 and anyone still unemployed, especially in Western Australia, has probably made a choice not to work.

Of course, I’d like to hear about importers, manufacturers and consumers held responsible for their use of plastics! This is not a hot topic with either major party, but it should be up there with national security, food security, education, health and housing costs. Instead, both parties promote green washing, fake change to make people feel better.

Tiny changes, such as refusing plastic cutlery and using your own bamboo implements which can be washed and reused, taking your own reusable straws and your own reusable cup are easy and would make a difference. Single use plastic bags are now banned in Western Australia. Look for products in glass containers as glass is infinitely recyclable. Use the paper bags intended for mushrooms if you don’t have fabric vegetable and fruit bags when you’re shopping. Little changes.

eating

It is so much cooler now in Western Australia and we have had very welcome rain, too. My thoughts turned to warming foods. I’ve made vegetable soup and also fritters. These are corn fritters. For a pop of colour and flavour I added finely chopped spring onion. Served with chili dipping sauce.

When I’m making cupcakes, muffins and fritters I use an old fashioned icecream scoop. This is an easy way to regulate the amount of batter used and the contents fall smoothly into the hot pan or paper cup. Easy to wash too and no spillage to clean up afterwards.

planting

The cooler weather means it’s time to plant tulips. In the past I have ordered tulips for my Mother and myself from a famous tulip grower in the east but we were both disappointed with how poorly they performed recently. This year we’ve bought the bulbs from a local shop. This was far more economical as we have to pay a quarantine fee to bring bulbs from the east to Western Australia to prevent the spread of disease.

red tulips in close up photography

I’ve planted Ed Rem Darwin tulips. The flowers are described as being intense orange – red with a yellow edge to the petal. A Darwin tulip is a cross between a single, late tulip and an early emperor tulip. I didn’t know that!

I have also planted out the cuttings I took from a pink pelargonia. I struck them in water until threadlike roots appeared on the stems then planted them in soil. They look healthy. The creeping fig and lucky bamboo I propagated are doing well, too. I enjoy creating new plants from cuttings.

COMPOST WEEK is from the 1st -7th May. I don’t make compost having created a few evil smelling piles of horrible mess in the past but I do make weed tea. I have plenty of weeds and like the idea of them adding nutrients to the garden. I use a plastic pot which has inbuilt drainage holes and a  little metal bucket. I put the pot in the bucket (it goes about half way down) fill it with weeds then add water to the bucket until it is full. For a few days after I push the now dying weeds down until all the foliage is in the water and leave it for about 10 days. Then I throw the mushy weeds into a big pot which holds my exhausted potting mix and pour the ( slightly stinky) weed tea concentrate into a bucket. I dilute this about 1:3 so I can see the bottom of the bucket. Today I poured it on food plants such as the passion fruit, blueberries and all my pots of herbs and spring onions.

Put weeds into a pot with drainage holes.

Insert the weeds into a bucket filled with water.

After about 10 days remove the weeds and pour the tea into a bigger bucket.

Dilute the tea about 1:3 with water and pour around plants.

The soggy dead weeds I put in the exhausted potting mix will become part of the soil improvement plan.

painting

We celebrate Mother’s Day in Australia on Sunday 8th of May. My Mother really likes and grows many carnations. She takes a slip off any existing plant and grows her own from it. So I have painted a carnation on the front of her Mother’s Day card. Every year we renew her subscription for her favourite gardening magazine as her Mother’s day gift. She is such an avid gardener!

Painted a few other flowers, too. I read blogs where the writers commit to doing a painting a day. I once followed a group doing a painting every day for one hundred days and made the time to complete that task but have never been able to consistently paint every day since. I paint in fits and starts. I mostly flowers.

DID YOU KNOW?

The Great Barrier Reef, off the coast of Queensland, is the largest ecosystem in the world. Made up of nearly 3000 individual reefs, it can been seen from space.

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An Interesting Day in Pinjarra

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Pinjarra, a country town on the banks of the Murray River, is 82km (51 miles) from Perth. It is one of the earliest settlements in Western Australia. The name Pinjarra is thought to be a corruption of the Aboriginal word beenjarrup, meaning place of the swamp.

Early settlers met with resistance from the local Aboriginal people. In 1834 this resulted in the Battle of Pinjarra, one of Australia’s worst recorded massacres.

In 1974 Alcoa established a major alumina refinery in the area greatly increasing the population of Pinjarra and nearby Mandurah on the coast.

We’d often pass through the town heading south but hadn’t stopped to explore for many years. It was an easy drive from Perth to Pinjarra on the Forrest Highway.

the evandale complex

Arrived at the well sign posted Evandale Complex, a group of buildings once belonging to the McLarty family. We parked and headed off to the first building. The garden above faces the main road into the town and is in front of the old school master’s house and the school. The school master’s house is now the home of the Murray Districts Historical Society.

The garden at the front of the School Master’s house is mainly planted with roses, including this stunner. Unfortunately, there’s no labels or site maps identifying the names of the roses. A site map for the entire complex would have been so useful! The lady in the shop thought they had one, but couldn’t find it.

Beautiful, well established roses and no signs of chili thrip!

Classic country school, designed by George Temple Poole (1856 -1934).  He was responsible for designing many public buildings in Western Australia including  Post Offices, Courthouses, Police Stations, Hospitals, the original Art Gallery in Perth, the original Museum, the Swan Brewery (now offices, apartments and a restaurant.) There are schools just like this one all over the state.

There’s more information about Temple Poole’s public buildings on this blog about Beverley, another old settlement in Western Australia. https://www.makecookgrow.com/2019/08/visiting-beverley-western-australia/

This spacious and fully restored four room school building is now the home of a group of patchworkers. Many of their beautiful works are for sale. There’s also interesting photos on the wall showing groups of former school children.

Autumn began eight weeks ago in the southern hemisphere, but this was the first real sign for me! Bulbs germinating in a garden bed near the carpark. Lovely.

The Art Gallery featuring works by local artists. This building, Liveringa, was built in the 1860s and is one of two homesteads on the property.

I did as directed: I drank coffee! Did I do stupid things? Not saying.

The museum is absolutely full of fascinating relics from another era when so many things were made at home. This is an Aladdin’s cave of treasures. Much of the machinery on display is still in working order. Most of the collection originated in the local district. We were accompanied throughout the workshop by a guide. She was so well informed and interesting.

Onto the shop featuring arts and crafts made by locals. Lots of treasures.

The shop and on the right, the end of the meeting room adjoining a big pottery area. So many areas for craft men and women to work, store their materials and display their products. So many interesting crafts people working at this site.

The original homestead built in 1888  and featuring wide verandas to protect the rooms from the harsh sunlight. It is now set up as tearooms. The rest of the building seemed to be storage and more meeting rooms. There are more tables at the back of the house, too.

 

This is the tearooms. It is where we had lunch, sitting outdoors overlooking a beautifully maintained garden leading up to the main road. There was a light breeze and it was pretty and peaceful.

I enjoyed a very good traditional quiche with not traditional chili dipping sauce.

My husband settled for a pot of tea and a scone with jam and cream which he really enjoyed. There is a limited menu with salad rolls and sandwiches, pies, cakes, hot chips and the wonderful quiche.

Then we set off to look around the town. I enjoyed visiting the new shopping centre. My husband sat in the car and read the paper.

Other buildings of interest include the old post office, on the main street, another Poole designed building. There’s several cafes offering lunch and snacks, some of the usual fast food places and some interesting shops along the main street.

DID YOU KNOW?

The Australian Alps get more snow than the Swiss Alps.

Eighty percent of Australians live on the coast of Australia.

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Tortilla Española, Reading, Lucky Bamboo and Rosemary.

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tortilla española

A blogger I follow likes to go through her extensive collection of recipe books every month. She selects one book. Then she makes one or two things from the chosen book. I decided to do the same. I’ve been reading Belinda Jeffery’s new book A Year Of Sundays. She describes this book as a “cookbook, a conversation and reflections on the world around me.” She writes about her cooking school, growing fruit and vegetables, trialing recipes and sharing food.

I chose to make Tortilla Española (p195). I remember we enjoyed this in Barcelona and I had all the ingredients in the fridge or cupboard. You need eggs, onions, potatoes and some oil. It’s a tasty alternative if you’ve given up meat for Lent. I used to make tortillas for picnics as they travel well and taste even better when they’re cold. I thought we’d enjoy this for lunch with a small salad. I was right!

Making the tortilla took quite a while as the potatoes need to cook for about 20 minutes with the onions, in hot oil. Then the potatoes and onions sit in the lightly beaten egg for about half an hour to absorb the egg flavour. I used this time to make the Homemade Mayonnaise (p175). I’d already separated the eggs, keeping the yolks for the mayonnaise and adding the whites to the tortilla mix. You know I hate to waste food!

My version and Jeffery’s version in the book.

While the potato and onion mix was absorbing the lightly beaten egg flavour, I started on the mayonnaise. None of Jeffery’s romantic balloon whisking for me! No lovely French ceramic bowl for mixing in, either. For years I have made mayonnaise in the food processor but today I made it using a Barmix and a jug. I used a blend of extra virgin olive oil and olive oil, as Jeffery suggested  and I like the flavour. Dripping the oil slowly into the mix meant the whole process took about 25 minutes. The resulting mayonnaise is thick and creamy. This recipe makes a lot of mayonnaise!

Belinda Jeffery’s A Year of Sundays has recipes arranged to reflect the seasonal fruit and vegetables available. The recipes are accompanied by beautiful, inspiring photographs and generally rely on ingredients which are commonplace. I found lots of recipes I’d like to make, including her version of Tomato Tarte Tatin, a new favourite.

reading

I’ve really enjoyed reading  Daniel Klein Travels with Epicurus. After the author is advised to have the teeth on his lower jaw removed and replaced with implants he begins contemplating the battle to fight off signs of ageing. Is it better to be forever young? Looking for answers, the author travels to the Greek Island of Hydra where he spent a gap year as a teenager. Here he observes and talks to the old men who gather daily to reminiscence  about lives well lived.

It is not the young man who should be  considered fortunate but the old man who  has lived well, because the young man in his prime wanders much by chance, vacillating in his beliefs, while the old man has docked in the harbour, having safeguarded his true happiness.

EPICURUS

Klein intersperses his observations with Epicurus’s quotes about the way to live a good life. We often relate Epicurus to epicurean style dining, which the great man himself eschewed for a bowl of lentils, eaten in the company of friends. He did not promote excesses in any area of life. Friendship was important and discussing the meaning of life was more important. Klein compares this relaxed way of living to his retiring American friends who have bucket lists, lengthy lists of goals and are driven to be frantically busy, but most of all, to look young. I think these are common goals in many societies.

            Not what we have, but what we enjoy, constitutes our happiness.

EPICURUS

His insights are based on the beliefs of Epicurus and other philosophers. This is philosophy ‘lite’ but thought provoking and interesting. An easy, good read.

lucky bamboo and rosemary

A few weeks ago I wrote about propagating new lucky bamboo stems, pruned from an old, dying (over fertilised) very large parent plant. They have done very well. Only one stem didn’t ‘take’ but the rest have healthy roots and are growing new leaves. I have planted them all in a pot in soil as they last longer than those growing in water. In a few weeks I will divide them into two pots.

Last Anzac Day, the 25th of April, I made Anzac Biscuits for the neighbours and added a piece of rosemary ( for remembrance) under the ribbon tied to each box. I also put a leftover piece in water. When it had good strong roots I planted it out in a pot. As it grew I began removing the growth on the lower part of the stem to create a topiary rosemary tree. It is going very well!

Have you begun Easter preparations? No controlled borders for us this year so we are really looking forward to our son coming to spend the Easter break with us!

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Propagating Plants, Chilli Thrip and Drinking Coffee

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propagating pelagoniums

Regular readers know I like to propagate my own plants. This is an satisfying and economical way to add to the garden. I’m really pleased with the strong growth on a collection of lucky bamboo stems I rooted a few weeks ago and will plant them in soil as soon as it is a bit cooler (here)

This pink pelagonium is sturdy and very pretty. It blooms regularly throughout the year. To create new plants I simply snip off a stem with some leaves, strip off all but about three  of the leaves then put the stem in a jar of water. Sometimes I dip the stem of plants I am propagating in rooting/hormone  powder but not pelagoniums.

I snip short pieces off the end of existing branches to propagate, not long pieces. You can do this any time of the year as pelagoniums  don’t have a dormant period like many plants. I always get the roots started in water but some people prefer planting the ‘slip’, the snipped off piece straight into potting mix.

Within days small white threadlike roots will begin appearing. I like four or five roots shooting before I plant them in soil. Due to the ongoing heat I am keeping these ‘slips’ in water inside with dappled light for a while longer. I will actually plant these in the trough the parent plant grows in. Massed together they look wonderful when they’re blooming.

Although I would normally start new creeping fig (ficus primula) plants in spring I really want to cover the back garden wall with greenery, so need new plants. It is partially covered with creeping fig. We have had an extremely blisteringly hot summer and like so many  other people, I have lost plants. A green wall might help cool the area in future summers.

Free Green Leaf Plant on Wall Stock Photo

Pexels

Interestingly, a neighbour told me creeping fig was a bit naff and out of fashion. Who knew? It is a good choice for the west facing wall I already have it growing on, only requires occasional pruning and doesn’t need a lot of water.

Other plants I have propagated include small leaf and common ivy (here), rosemary, box and hydrangeas.

roses and chilli thrip

Last year Chilli Thrip  decimated roses in this area. The Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development says thrips are most active during spring, summer and autumn. They say the recent few days of rainfall and humidity have created perfect conditions for the thrips which feed on the sugars of the new shoots on plants. The sap sucking insects caused deformities in flowers, stems and leaves.

The only treatment is spraying with harsh chemicals. The added problem is that everyone nearby has to treat their roses, too, as the thrips quickly move from one address to another. I love my roses and am glad they have all survived being attacked as many around here haven’t but I am not keen on spraying them for most of the year to prevent attacks.

In the meanwhile, regular spraying has resulted in some beautiful roses in the house but not the vase full above: they were bought!

macarons

Still eating macarons although the French celebrated Macaron Day on the 20th of March. The best recipe on Youtube for first time makers is this one (here)   but I find it a bit too temping having lots of sweet, pretty, delicious macarons in the house!

coffee

I’m a long time drinker of coffee. A friend and I used to sneak out of boarding school in the evenings and on the weekends, go down a back lane  then  cross the main street to drink coffee in a Greek cafe. That worked well for about two years until the evening we were leaving the cafe and looked up and saw the head of our boarding house watching us through the bus window.  That didn’t end well.

Coffee, Coffee Grinds, Cafe

Image Pixabay

My coffee drinking penchant developed over the years. I used to drink long blacks day and night, then about twenty five years ago began drinking espressos. At home, my preferred place to enjoy good coffee, I drink espressos and when I out, I order double espressos, hoping for, but often not getting, depth of flavour. Now I stop drinking coffee around 4pm because I’ve read it can interfere with sleep.

Coffee, Cappuccino, Latte, Espresso, Americano

Image Pixabay

I’ve also just read that recent research says coffee is good for you! What a relief. Apparently around four cups of coffee a days has been shown to lower the risk of developing coronary heart disease, heart failure and heart disease. Regular drinkers of coffee live longer and are less likely to develop Type 2 diabetes, Parkinson’s disease, have a stroke or develop chronic liver disease. Coffee boosts awareness and improves exercise endurance. And it tastes great! So, whether you’re enjoying a coffee and a quiet moment or sitting with friends and chatting, it’s reassuring to know your coffee is promoting good health.

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International Women’s Day, Plastic Pollution Treaty, Painting and Eating

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international women’s day

Last week, on Tuesday 8th March, we celebrated International Women’s Day.  The campaign theme this year is #BreakTheBias. Officially recognised by the United Nations in 1975 I wonder what has changed. A recent study, quoted in the Sunday Times Body and Soul liftout (March 5th, 2022) refers to a study which found that young females exhibiting headstrong behaviours grow up to earn about $4000 less a year compared with men in a similar position. Interestingly, young males who demonstrated headstrong behaviours end up earning more than men who were considered dependent in childhood. So girls are still expected to be compliant. Boys are seen as leaders, girls are seen as bossy.

woman signing on white printer paper beside woman about to touch the documents

Unsplash Photo Credit

While it seems obvious that women need to get into the top positions in management and boardrooms and generate change, there’s that tricky little problem of maternity leave. Men feel women lose momentum after having children. Childcare is disproportionately the mother’s problem. Not many fathers prefer to stay at home and mind the baby. It’s often not a choice for many parents as (of course) the father has a greater earning capacity.

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, a woman working full time earns $1575 a week compared to a man, who earns an average of $1837. The Australian Federal Government has introduced guaranteed superannuation contributions during maternity leave plus a baby bonus of $5000 for women giving birth or adopting a baby. Unfortunately, women are still retiring with an average of 23% less super than men due to lower pay and time out of the workforce.

Golden Retriever lying on bed

Photo Credit Upsplash

The same issues women were campaigning against in the seventies are still being discussed today. Women want equality of opportunity, greater flexibility in their paid work (working from home, for instance) and equal pay for equal work, resulting in financial security.  They are tired of sexual innuendo and harassment. The situation is changing, but too slowly. Time for positive and meaningful change at all levels.

historic plastic deal signed in nairobi by 175 nations

On the topic of change, in another long overdue response to social pressure, 175 nations belonging to the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA) met in Nairobi to sign a legally binding commitment to end plastic pollution by 2024. While the details now have to worked out, the meeting acknowledges that plastic pollution is a worldwide problem. It spans international borders and all nations must work together to solve the problem.

The treaty encompasses all stages of the life of plastic: it’s production, consumption and disposal. The treaty is legally binding, includes financing mechanisms and acknowledges that some countries can do more than others.

white and brown boats on blue sea water during daytime

Unsplash Photo Credit

“In the space of one human lifetime, we have caused unimaginable damage to the global environment, choking every part of the global ocean with plastic pollution”, said Lord Zac Goldsmith, a UK Minister for the International Environment.

painting and eating

Whenever I go near the fridge at the moment I seem to open it and have a look. Obviously, nothing has changed since I last looked, no amazing treat has magically appeared, but I do get inspired to paint what I see. Then I usually eat it! Not a good plan.

I made an  Egg, Creamed Corn and Potato Pie, by mistake. Had some lovely free range eggs to use so added some grated Edam, which was getting a bit elderly, 4 medium potatoes thinly sliced longways, a tomato and then went looking for something else preferably something to add some colour. Found a tin of corn in the pantry. I’d sliced the potatoes, beaten the eggs and grated cheese and just needed to add the corn. Surprise! It was a can of creamed corn, origin unknown! Pondered briefly, then added the creamed corn to the egg mixture, mixed well then constructed the pie. Layer of thinly sliced raw potato, egg mixture another layer of potato then a cut up tomato on top a grind of pepper. About 40 minutes in 170°C oven. Quick. Easy.

This ended up as a very tasty experiment. We really enjoyed it. I’m not sure I’ll make it again as I never think to buy creamed corn but it blended well with the egg and tasted very good. Add salad for lunch or cooked vegetables for dinner.

I don’t buy a lot of books despite being a keen reader. My husband buys a few books every month. The problem is storage. We have a large room upstairs with bookshelves built floor to ceiling on two walls and every shelf is full. Some are packed two books deep.

I borrow books from the library. If I really enjoy a book I buy it, but not very often. A fortnight ago I borrowed, read and reviewed Jaclyn Crupti’s Garden Like A Nonno. I read every page. This book is packed with practical advice. I didn’t want to return it to the library, so I bought a copy! It wont be going upstairs either, there’s so many things I want to start doing now, particularly improving our scorched, grey beach sand soil. I’m collecting the things I need to make weed fertilizer right now. (Page 68, I know because I’ve already marked it.)

My final painting of food from the fridge; I’m back to painting flowers.

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